KERRY I'm not going to say one, two, three. I will tell you that I
have 20 years of experience on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. I have personal relationships with leaders around the
world. I will not cede our security to any other country. I won't
cede our security to any institution, but I know how to reach out to
countries and leaders and build bipartisan-support structures
necessary to strengthen the country.

TIME You can't be more specific?

KERRY I know exactly what I'm going to do, but I'm not the President
today. I've already laid out the international conference, the shared
responsibilities between European and Arab countries, the more rapid
training of Iraqi police and military. I think it's almost pathetic
the rate at which we have done that. They [the Bush Administration]are hardly behaving like we're truly a country at war. It's pathetic
that they left ammunition dumps and nuclear facilities unprotected.

They disbanded the Iraqi military. They didn't protect the
borders. It's one of the most catastrophic
jobs of management that I've ever seen.

TIME Will you be more specific about timetables for getting troops
out?

KERRY I have said that I have a goal to be able to bring our troops
out of there within my first term, and I hope to be able to bring out
some troops within the first year. But what's important here is that
I can fight a more effective war on terror. George Bush diverted the
focus from Afghanistan. The 9/11 commission makes it clear that
Saddam Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11, nothing to do with
al-Qaeda. The war was against al-Qaeda and for getting justice for
9/11. George Bush diverted attention from that. And we're spending
$200 billion over there [in Iraq] now that could have gone to schools
in America, could have gone to after-school programs, could have gone
to health care, could have gone to infrastructure.

TIME Do you think President Bush shirked his duties during the
Vietnam era?

KERRY I'm focused on the issues of now and today. The White House can
answer questions they need to answer. I've answered all the questions
I'll answer.

TIME How would you go about winning the war of ideas in the Middle
East?

KERRY What I intend to do is to put in play the economic power, the
values and principles, the public diplomacy, so we're isolating the
radical Islamic extremists and not having the radical extremists
isolate the United States. It means bringing religious leaders
together, including moderate mullahs, clerics, imamspulling the
world together in a dialogue about who these extremists really are
and how they are hijacking the legitimacy of Islam itself. That takes
leadership, and that leadership has not been put on the table.

You have almost 60% of the populations of Egypt and Saudi Arabia
under 30, and 50% under 18. We have to engage in a way that offers
them some alternative to the radical madrasahs that are educating
them to hate and to go out and strap explosives around themselves.

They [the Bush Administration] haven't even engaged in a legitimate
effort to try to really transform the ability of Israel to find a
legitimate entity to negotiate with. The only thing they do is rattle
the saber.